Kaaba and the Biblical Arc of the Covenant

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The webpage, part of G.V. Nosovsky and A.T. Fomenko's "New Chronology" series, argues that the original Kaaba (with its Black Stone) was not in Mecca but located in ancient Bilär near Kazan on Rus' (Russian) territory.

Key points:
- The Muslim Kaaba is the same as the biblical Tabernacle and Ark of the Covenant, which housed sacred stone fragments.
- The Black Stone (Hajar al-Aswad) is identified as pieces of a meteorite (or volcanic lava) that fell from heaven, originally white but darkened by human sins and constant kissing/touching. It parallels the stone tablets Moses received on Mount Sinai (which he shattered in anger over the golden calf) and the 12 precious stones in the high priest's breastplate.
- Biblical Exodus from "Egypt" (reinterpreted as a Rus' region) and the Islamic Hijra (622 AD) are seen as duplicates of the same 15th-century event tied to medieval Rus'-Horde/Ottoman (Ataman) history.
- The shrine initially contained Christian icons (e.g., Virgin Mary and infant Jesus), later becoming exclusively Muslim after religious separation in the 16th–17th centuries, with its "relocation" to Arabia being legendary.
- Visual evidence compares medieval drawings of the Tabernacle (tent-like cube with enclosure) to 19th-century images of the Meccan Kaaba, showing strong similarities.
- The authors claim true history places this sacred site on Rus' land no earlier than the early 15th century, with much of "ancient" biblical and early Islamic history being misdated duplicates of medieval Russian events.

Чудо света на Руси под Казанью

And another post
Меняем даты - меняется все. НАЛОЖЕНИЕ БИБЛИИ НА ФАНТОМНЫЕ И РЕАЛЬНЫЕ ЕВРОПЕЙСКО-АЗИАТСКИЕ СОБЫТИЯ СРЕДНИХ ВЕКОВ ПРИ СДВИГЕ НА 1800 ЛЕТ И БОЛЕЕ.
 
I've noticed that Morozov makes rather random matches between the sound of russian and foreign words. I used to think he's got a hypothesis on that but now I see that it doesn't make sense. It's likely he just picks slavic words similar in meaning and pronunciation to help the reader to memorize unfamiliar terms:

Savior - spasatel (rescuer)
Buddha - buditel (one forcing to wake up)
Kaaba - cubic
hadj - hojdenie (walking)
 
  • Islam was invented by "the choose ones". Can you imagine how powerful the mind control has to be to make a person give their energy to a black cube in the desert? Not once, but five times everyday, and it has to be done/sent in the correct direction. Now multiply that by 2 billion.
  • It's in the name: Kaaba and Allah
  • Muhammad/Mahomet is Baphamet written in a way that camouflages it
  • The Bible is not a historical book, but an allegorical one. It's not about places, characters, or an external savior coming from the clouds. It's internal; it is inside of you already (if you are man ou woman) it is about Iesa Chriost, the processes within your body.
 
Fomenko theory on Hijri dates has clear shortcomings.

His supposed chronology of Islam is too short and very Russian - centric

He fails badly when he wants to analyze coins with Arabic writings and Hijri dates.
 
Fomenko theory on Hijri dates has clear shortcomings.

His supposed chronology of Islam is too short and very Russian - centric

He fails badly when he wants to analyze coins with Arabic writings and Hijri dates.
Is it possible to do the following: make a timeline and mark on it the dates taken from books that mention that specific date, in order to determine the earliest and latest periods of widespread use of the calendar? In this way, we will be able to establish the period during which this calendar was used continuously, as it should be, and any sharp increases, drops, or even gaps in its use would raise suspicions, as will the number of instances of earlier dates outside the period of widespread use; I think there will be far fewer of those.

The Inscription Of Zuhayr - One Of The Earliest Dated Hijazi Inscriptions, 24 AH / 644 CE

This one is kinda suspicious because it's such short text and focuses primarily on the date. All it says is "bismillah, I'm Zuhayr, Umar died in 24 AH" 😅
 
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It is hard to believe that an inscription can survive after 1400 years

However there are very well documented objects with Hijri dates at least from 600 years ago and on.
 
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